President Clinton on Friday will "e-sign" a bill that makes electronic signatures as valid as their ink counterparts in the city where America's founding fathers signed the Declaration of Independence. On the grounds in Philadelphia where the Declaration of Independence was . . .
President Clinton on Friday will "e-sign" a bill that makes electronic signatures as valid as their ink counterparts in the city where America's founding fathers signed the Declaration of Independence. On the grounds in Philadelphia where the Declaration of Independence was signed with a quill pen, Clinton will use a smart card to sign the Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act.